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EXISTENCE RESEMBLES LOOM
Intercourse Across the Chasm of
Death May Be Gradually
Attained, He Asserts.
Special Cable to The American.
BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND, Sept.
13.—“I am one of those who think
that the methods of science are not
po limited in scope as has been
thought, that they can be applied
much more widely and that the
psychic region can be studied and
brought under law, too.”
So declared the learned Sir Oliver
Lodge, president of the British As
sociation for the Advancement of
Science, in his address at the opening
of the association’s meeting here to
day.
And again the erudite president
said:
“Already the facts examined have
convinced me that memory and affec
tion are not limited to that associa
tion with matter by which alone they
can manifest thoniseives here and
now, and that personality persists be
yond personal death.”
So, despite his denial that he would
invade the psychic region in his ad
dress Sir Oliver din enter it, but he
watched his every step, guarded his
every word.
“Keystone of Evolution.”
Said he to his great audience:
“If we have learned from science
that evolution is real, we have learned
a great deal. Surelv evolution is not
an illusion: surely the universe pro
gresses in time. Time and space and
matter •ire abstractions, but are none
the less real: they are data given by
experience: and time is the keystone
cf evolution.
“I see the whole of material exist
ence a® a steady passage from past
to future, only the single instant
which we call the present being ac
tual. The past is not non-existent,
however; It is stored in our memo
ries; there is a record of it in matter,
and the present is based upon it; the
e is the outcome of the present
and is the product of evolution.
Life Is Like a Loom.
“Existence is like the jutput front 1
a loom. The pattern, the design for
the weaving, is in some sort there’
already; but whereas our looms are
mere machines, once the guiding
cards have been fed into them, the j
Loom of Time is complicated by a |
multitude of free agents who can
modify the web. * * *
. “Either we are immortal beings or
we are not. We may not know our
destiny, but we must have a destiny
of some Sort. Those who make de
nials are just as likely to be wrong
as those who make assertions; in fact,
denials are assertions thrown into
negative form.
“Scientific men are looked up to as
authorities and should be careful not
to mislead. Science may not be able
to reveal human destiny, but it cer
tainly should not obscure it. Things
are as they are, whether we find them
out or not.
Asks for a Fair Trial.
“Allow us, anyhow, to make the at
tempt. Give us a fair field. Let those
who prefer the materialistic hypothe
sis by all means develop their thesis
as far as they can; but let us try
what we can do in the psychical re
gion and see which wins.
“Our methods are really the same
as theirs—the subject matter differs.
Neither should we abuse the other for
making the attempt.
“In justice to myself and my co
workers I must leave on record our
conviction that occurrences now re
garded as occult can be explained and
reduced to order by the methods of
science carefully and persistently ap
plied.’’ said Sir Oliver, on whom uni
versities have showered honorary de
grees.
“The evidence, to my mind., goes to
prove that discarnate intelligence, un
der certain conditions, may interact
with us on the material side, thus in
directly coming within our scientific
ken; and that gradually we may Hope
to attain some understanding of the
nature of a larger, perhaps the real,
existence, and of the conditions reg
ulating intercourse across the chasm."
'BOY UBGES OPERATION
TO LET HIM GO TO SCHOOL
LOGANSPORT, INI)., Sept. 13.—
Mrs. Jessie James stood on a corner
in the business district to-day con
versing with her father. John Ginga-
man, and near by, gazing at her, were
grouped five mashers. Mrs. James
bade her father good-bye and started
away.
“Oh, you chicken! Busy?” cried
one of the group.
Wheeling around, Mrs. James step
ped back to the group, and smilingly
inquired, “Who spoke?”
One of the crowd stepped out an!
asked: “Where you going?”
Mrs. James slammed h r fist against
his face and he staggered. Before he
could recover she struck again, a fair,
straight blow, which put him to the
sidewalk.
Then she rushed upon the otWer
four, who crowded against a building
Her attack was so unexpected and
forceful that the quartet had felt
| the effects of her fists before one of
j them fought back and knocked Mrs.
Jame9 across the sidewalk and
against a mail box.
She stooped, grabbed a loose pav
ing brick and let it fly. It landed
on the head of the man she had
knocked down, and who had risen
and was running away. The others
followed and boarded an outgoing
interurban car. _ /
From the corner to the place where
they took the car a trail of blood
marked the passing of the one against
whose head Mrs. James’ brick collid
ed.
“Sometimes I carry a gun,” said
Mrs. James to the crowd that gath
ered about her. “I am glad I did
not have it to-day. Hereafter I will
carry it. and If I am addressed as I
was to-day I’ll kill the man who does
It”
Wife Asks $50,000
For Husband’s Loss
ANN HARBOR, MICH., Sept. 13.-
Making the journey from his home in
Lewistown to this city alone, where
he went to the University Hospital .o
prepare for an operation for the re
moval of cataracts which are threat
ening his sight, Charles Rice, 8 years
old, is anxious to have the doctors
begin the work at once, so he may at
tend school for the first time next
month.
. NEW YORK, Sept. 13—That the
American-Hawaiian Steamship Com
pany will send a steamship through
the Panama Canal every 36 hours
next year, and that instead of sail
ing every five days they will send
their vessels out every three days,
was part of the program announced
here to-day by the company.
The statement was provoked be-
cause an issued report stated that the
American-Hawaiian line was consid
erably “overbuilt.”
In answer the company stated that
it requires * a year to complete a
steamship, and they have thus far
launched four of their new fleet of
eight big cargo carriers. The others
will go into service in March, 1914, by
which time it is expected the canal
will be ready for use.
The statement of the company fol
lows :
“The fact of having excess tonnage
far ahead of the opening of the canal
does not disconcert us and the ’Amer
ican-Hawaiian line is proud of the
fact that their fleet with a capacity
of 270,000 tons will be ready in time.
When the canal route is used we shall
maintain a schedule of one steamer
sailing from New York every three
days.
“It is true that we have chartered
the American and the California to
the American and Cuban Steamship
Company and we believe these steam
ships will make several trips to Bra
zil. These are the ships we con
structed when the company was feel
ing its way, and their arrival in the
South American ports will place on
view the American flag, the lack of
which in foreign waters has been
commented on many times."
Colorado Women Files Sensational
Damage Suit Against Her Pa-
rents-in-Law.
Most-Reported-To-Be-Engaged Girl in United
States Still Reigns Supreme.
NEWPORT, Sept. 13.—For the
fourth time Paul A. Andrews, pos
sessor of millions and a surpassingly
attractive daughter, has wearily
penned a note to the public. It is
the same note every time with but
the only difference that each bears
the name of a different young man
coupled with that,of beautiful Mar
garet Andrews, the surpassingly at
tractive daughter hitherto mentioned.
This last note was a denial that
Miss Andrews was engaged to Mor
gan Belmont, son of August Belmont.
One before that had its mission in
telling the world that Miss Andrews
was not engaged to Harold Vanderbilt.
Before that it was Herman Oelrichs.
And the first one was Vincent Astor.
And Miss Margaret is but 19. and
her second year out. She is the most-
reported-to-be-engaged girl in the
Newport set. Rumor has coupled her
name so often and so sincerely with
one youth after another of the gilded
ftet that it would seem Rumor would
lose its reputation for veracity. For
each time the gossip has fallen flat,
under the emphatic little card from
Father Andrews.
Young Belmont Attentive.
This last time all Newport thought
the pursuit of beautiful Margaret An
drews over. Morgan Belmont was
most assiduous in his attentions. The
things he told Miss Andrews and the
manner in which he told them didn’t
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seem to make her a bit angry. They
were together tnuch of the time. And
so. in Society's mind, it was all set
tled. Until came the note from Mr.
Andrews.
The affair has served merely to in
crease the score of Miss Andrews as
the most-reported-to-be-engaged girl
for her years. She is just l!r, and
they day her head Is not turned a bit.
And she is well worth while in other
ways, being beautiful, 5-lender, lively
and a daring motorist, rider, swim
mer, tennis player and all that.
From the moment she first entered
the gayety of the younger set she has
been courted. Several years ago,
when she was very young, indeed,
and before she had made her debut.
Vincent Astor noticed her. He was
then a freshman at Harvard, and
morning, noon and nighj found him
at the 5*ide of the dainty girl. But she
was very young then, and Society’s
gossip of their engagement did not
bear much conviction.
Herman Oelrichs Ardent.
Vincent Astor, the suitor, was some
what distant, somewhat superior,
somewhat open in his attitude of be
ing the richest youth. Miss Andrews’
next suitor, however, was as ardent
as could be desired. He was Herman
Oelrichs, not quite as rich as Vincent
Astor. *but wealthy enough at that.
Then It was Harold Vanderbilt, who
courted in a warm, orthodox fashion
himself.
But of them all, Morgan Belmont
was the movt attentive, the mosf
tireless, the most devoted. And So
ciety believes that is the reason Fa
ther Andrews’ note of denial bore so
emphatic and conclusive a tone. He
probably was perturbed a bit himself.
Miss Andrews, the object of all this
go 5-sip, is with it all the most popular
girl in Newport. She is never bored,
never listless, never indifferent. In so
far as that goes, she is different.
Therefore, she has more than her
share of attention, and no girl who
gets attention can hope to escape the
gossip. Hence the reports, and hence
the weary job of Father Andrews In
penning his notes to the public.
GEORGETOWN, COLO., Sept. 13.
Robert and Isadore Nimme, wealthy
residents of Idaho Springs, have been
made defendants In an alienation suit
filed in the district court of Clear
Creek County by Jennie May Nimme,
their daughter-in-law. Judgment i«
asked in the sum of $25,000 and $25,-
000 punitive damages.
Mrs. Nimme the younger alleges in
her complaint, which is rather sen
sational in its wording, that the de
fendants poisoned the mind of their
son Henry against her, causing him
to finally drive her from home. She
further charges that they have on
various occasions beaten and bruised
her. all of which she contends has
“caused her much mental anguish
and bodily injury.”
History Study Scored
By School President
Indiana Solon Says World Events
Are Too “High-Brow” for Youth
ful Minds.
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 13.—History
is one of the most useless subjects
taught in the common schools, in the
opinion of W. W. Parsons, president
of the Indiana State Normal School
at Terre Haute.
President Parsons says he bases
his thoughts about history on the
necessary reaction on the part of a
person acquiring historical knowl
edge. To make his w-ords clear, he
said the mind of a child, and even
that of an older person, can not
grasp hhe magnitude of the battle of
Gettysburg or similar events, which
are the more important history’ les
sons.
Despite his opinion. President Par
sons did not advocate less history in
the grade schools or any change in
the system of teaching that branch.
Suffragists Scoff
“Adamless Eden”
Denver Women Voters Admit That
' They Do Not Posses^ Spinster
Spirits.
DENVER, Sept. 13.—Mrs. Kate T.
Wolsey, of New York, who has of
fered to subscribe $!>00,000 to found a
college of women that would be a real
A damless Eden, need expect no help
in her project from Denver women.
“I am going to the colony when It
Is organized," announced State Sena
tor Helen Ring Robinson, “to write
an article about it, not to stay. I
might stand it a little while. I could
bear having men around less, but I
like to see them .V dinner sometimes.
An Adamless Eden might be an in
teresting experiment, but I’m sure it
would not be an interesting place to
live in, at least, not to me. There
are women who have ‘spinster souls;’
they can live without the society of
men and not be unhappy. I frankly
admit I have not a ’spinster soul.’ "
Police Get Burglar
Pausing to “Primp”
Robber Is Donning Stolen Raiment
When Neighbors Notice Him
and Give Alarm
ELOPERS ARE MARRIED
AFTER NIGHT IN JAIL
TERRE HAUTE, IND., Sept, !3.—
After being in jail overnight, Ches
ter R. Schlatter, of Chicago, an em
ployee of the Illinois Central Rail
road, and Bernie E. Martin, aged 17,
of Bloomingdale, were married by
the Rev. Paul C. Cl- ’nick. Schlatter
was visiting in Bloomingdale hei.
the elopement was planned. They
left for Chicago after the wedding.
Greeley Coach Will
Make One More Trip
Ancient Vehicle That Hauled Editor,
Brete Harte and Mark Twain
Will Reappear.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 13.—When
California makes merry at the Por-
tola Festival next October, in this
city, a post of honor in the parade
will be given to “Charlie McLean No.
1“—a stage coach with a place in the
history of the State.
This coach is a link with the pe
riod of Bret Harte and Mark Twain.
According to Honn. from $5,000,000
to $10,000,000 In bullion has been
transported in it. Black Bart, Joaquin
Murietta and Vasquez halted it In
their heyday or were defied by its
messengers. It still carries bullet
holes.
It was in the “Charlie McLean”
that Horace Greeley made his noted
ride to keep a lecturing engagement
at Placerville, when the name wasn’t
Placervllle. but Hangtown. Sam
Clemens was its passenger many
times when, In his newspaper days,
he covered the Nevada Legislature at
Carson City.
Buys Whole Town
and the Landscape
Hotel Keeper Will Take Over Entire
California Hamlet for a Sum
mer Resort.
CHICO, CAL., Sept. 13—Not sat
isfied with owning property In Chico
worth a fortune. Jack Murphy, own
er of the Western Hotel, has bought a
whole town, Burney Valley, and the
adjoining landscape.
The purchase includes the pictur
esque pioneer village, located in
Northwestern Shasta County, near
the celebrated Burney Falls, and 800
acres around the place. The town
consists of five residences, two ho
tels, a store, blacksmith shop, post-
office, granaries, barns and a building
or two where thero used to be sa
loons before the interior of the county
went dry. He got the whole outfit
for somer.hing over $50,000.
Murphy will raise stock on the land
and convert the town into a summer
resort.
Famous Author of Matrimonial Essays Sues for
Freedom from Young Chicago Husband.
FORT SILL, OKLA., Sept. 13.—In
the Wichita National Game Preserve,
ten to fifteen miles west of Fort Sill,
the United States Government has
undertaken to restore and perpetuate
the useful wild game animals and the
wild game birds that abounded In the
Southwest in frontier days.
This was the natural range of the
buffalo, the elk, the deer and the
antelope. All have been brought back
to the preserve, which contains near
ly 70,000 acres. Frank Rush, an ex
perienced plainsman, is warden of the
preserve.
' In March, 1905, the New York Zoo
logical Society sent a herd of six
male and nine female buffalo to the
preserve. The herd has increased to
forty fine full-blooded speimens.
Dr. William T. Rornaday, the noted
naturalist, predicts that by 1918 the
herd will number a hundred.
Eleven prong-horned antelope ar
rived from Yellowstone Park In 1911.
The antelope Is wild and timid, and
four died from the long railroad jour
ney. Later five more died. A fine
buck and a fine doe survived, and
Warden Rush is confident that they
will grow Into a herd.
A herd of twelve elk Is thriving.
The native white-tailed deer is rapid
ly "increasing and now numbers pos
sibly 200.
Bartenders Must
Stand Examination
Candidates for Position Must Know
What Is a Minor and the
. Sunday Laws.
PATERSON, N. J.. Sept. 13 —Bar
tenders have organized a union and
have decided that all future members
must answer the following questions
before they qualify:
"What is a minor?”
“Give ten ways of selling liquor on
Sunday with the front door locked
and all shades down.”
“What Is the best medicine in the
world besides whisky?”
“Can you tell whether a man J9
married or single by the drink he or
ders?”
“Which is considered best to re
move a whisky breath—cloves or an
other drink?”
Lyceum Course Has
Star Attractions
LaFollette, Burns, Helen Keller and
Other Notables to Appear
in Atlanta.
The Alkahest Lyceum course will
bring to Atlanta the coming season
some of the most brilliant and popu
lar entertainers on the lyceum stage.
Manager Russell Bridges has made
careful selections for this season’s
offerings and feels confident they
wil’. prove popular.
They include such lecturers and
entertainers as Senator LaFollette,
Detective W. J. Burns, Benjamin
Chapin’s impersonation of Lincoln,
Helen Keller, Dr. Hugh Black, Rihel-
daffer-Gailey Musical Company and
others of equal note.
Season tickets will go on sale at
the Cable Piano Company, Broad
street near Peachtree, September 29,
and the sale will continue through
Thursday, October 2.
NEW YORK, Sept. 13.—Stopping
j for half an hour to “primp” before a
’ mirror and adorn himself in raiment
he was preparing to steal caused the
undoing of Thomas Kennedy, arrest
ed on a charge of burglary in a home
in the fashionable South Side resi
dence district after a revolver battle
with three policemen.
Kennedy forgot to pull dowm the
blinds. Neighbors called the police.
Several hundred dollars’ worth of
j jewelry had been collected in a bun-
1 die by the intruder.
Hoosier Merchants
Must Get Yardsticks
Commissioner Prepares Pamphlet
Declaring Scale on Counter
Marked With Tacks Illegal.
INDIANAPOLIS. IND., Sept. 13.—
No more will the small Hoosier store
keeper measure off his ginghams,
calico or silks on an improvised
scale, marked off with tacks on the
inside of his counter.
This practice has been declared
Illegal by H. E. Barnard, State Com
missioner of Weights and Measures,
and he Is preparing a pamphlet on
the subject to be distributed among
tho small town shopkeepers.
Mrs. Lillian Bell Bogue, famous au
thor, in the days when she still was
Miss Lillian Bell, of Atlanta, indorsed
a cynical bit of advice. It was:
“Marry early, and If the circum
stances permit—often.”
Now iYlrs. Bogue is an inconsistent
person, as you will come to know.
She forgot what she had written, at
least the last part of it, married Ar
thur Hoyt Bogue, a young Chicago
man seven years her junior, and
vowed undying love.
Later she recollected, and w r rote:
“What Is marriage for. anyway?
Is it built on anything but selfish
ness? And if so, is it surprising that
it fails? The wonder to me is that
so many hold.”
And now she Is seeking a divorce
from her husband.
Considered Love Expert.
Her divorce suit has created some
thing of a stir in literary circles, be
cause Mrs. Bogue professed to be an
authority on matters pertaining to
love and marriage. But the courses
of erotic experts sometimes go awry,
it seems.
Under the name of Lillian Bell she
wrote miles upon miles of pseudo ad
vice and instruction upon the relation
of sex to sex. < me <>f her i" t theoiU s
was a “college for lovers,” in which
she would establish courses in “How.
to manage a clever woman,” “How to
keep your wife in love with you,”
“How to develop your wife’s person
ality,” and all that. It is notable that
most of her advice went out to men.
Through it all her writings were a
strange mixture of sentiment and a
cynicism, with more of the latter
than the former, perhaps, just as her
career has been a strange mixture of
happiness and sadness. Altogether,
she is Inconsistent. For instance:
“No man under 35 is fit for mar
riage. Younger than that, men are
stupid, egotistical and boorish.”
When she wrote that she was 33
Within a few months she met, loved
and married Arthur Hoyt Bogue, Just
25 years old, a Chicago real estate
man.
"Of course." she explained it. "I do
not really believe all the things I
wrote. That article was merely the
result of a conversation with a maga
zine editor.”
Another proof of her inconsistency:
Miss Lillian Bell laughed at the
suitor who did too much suing. She
said the man itius take what he
wants, after the manner of the old
cave dweller.
Compelling Power Wins.
“It needs a compelling, not a per
suasive power, to win a woman,” said
she. “No man who takes me like
this can have me.” and she gently
touched together her forefinger and
thumb. “He must take me like this,”
and she clenched her fist.
Then she married. To all appear
ances; that is, to judge from appear
ances as she presents them. Mr.
Bogue was anything but the charac
ter of forrefulness.
“My husband has never earned a
living for me since we were married,”
she said in an interview the other day.
“I have supported him and our daugh
ter for the last ten years.”
Mrs. Bogue, it seems, has not the
ability to abide by her own precept,
nor to persuade her own husband to
accept her advice.
Too bad, too. She had much advice
to give, especially along the lines that
had to do with man and maid. All
she wrote was on that sentimental
subject of love, courtship and mar
riage. “The Love Affairs of an Old
Maid,” for instance, and “^rom a
Girl’s Point of View” and dozens of
articles of the same tone.
Mrs. Bogue says her husband is a
drunkard and worthless. If so, she
can hardly be blamed. Mr. Bogue
says his wife Is fanatical and intoler
ant. If so—but this Is not brief of
their affair. It is merely a revelation
of the fact that Mrs. Lillian Bell
Bogue, estimable author, preceptor of
lovers and wedded folk, is an Incon
sistent philosopher, and a teacher
without the ability of self-instruction.
Also, it might Illustrate the fallacy of
setting one’s self up as an authority
on matters of love, courtship and
marriage.
Girls’ Tomato Club
Attracts Eye of U. S,
Western Farm Lassies Compete
With Each Other in Getting
Up Cheapest Meals.
Boy Twice Struck
By Lightning Bolt
Knocked From Wagon, He Recovers
and Goes Home, To Be Hit
Again on Doorstep.
PORTERVILLE, Sept, j 13.—Royal
Danner, aged 15, after being knocked
unconscious from a delivery wagon
by a bolt of lightning yesterday, re
covered sufficiently to reach his home,
but as he started up the front porch
steps he was felled by a second bolt.
He quickly recovered, however, and
is little the worse to-day for the dou
ble shock.
CLEVELAND. Sept. 13.—The To
mato Club, founded by Mrs. J. K.
Turner among a group of farm girls
In Geauga County, and the recent at
tack on the high cost of living on the
farm, also led by Mrs. Turner, have
attracted the attention of the United
I States Government.
Miss Ilena May Bailey, of the farm
management office of the Department
of Agriculture, Is at the Turner farm,
near Chardon, to investigate the work
being done. Miss Bailey is interested
particularly In the contest among
farm women to prepare the best and
most economical meals In the farm
house for the month of August.
Lesson in Scientific
Complexion Renewing
(From The Family Physician.)
Everyone has a beautiful skin under
neath the ore exposed to view. Bear
that in mind and it will be easier to
understand the correct principle in ac
quiring a lovely complexion. Nature is
constantly shedding the top skin in flaky
particles like dandruff, only much small
er in sd^e In abnormal conditions, or in
advancing age, these particles are not
shed as rapidly as in robust youth. The
longer they remain the more soiled or
faded they become- that’s the imme
diate cause of a "bad complexion.”
It has been discovered that ordinary
mercolized wax, to be had of any drug
store, will absorb these worn-out parti
cles. The absorption, while hastening
Nature’s work, goes on gradually enough
to cause no inconvenience. In a week
or two the transformation is complete.
The fresh, healthy-hued, youthful under-
skin is then wholly in evidence. You
who are not satisfied with your com-
f dexions should get an ounce of i.ierco-
ized wax and try this treatment. Use
the wax nightly, like cold cream, wash
ing it off mornings.—Advt.
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GLENN PHOTO STOCK COMPANY
EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY,
117 PEACHTREE STREET.
ATLANTA. GA.
ITEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1913.
Newport Belle Again Dodges Cupid |(/|ASHERS PUT
*••5 "!•••!• •!•••!■ +#4. 4.«+ I _ „
irr > w +•+ *•* +•* *•*
Llrt, Father Denies Troth Fourth Time
+•+
Sir Oliver Lodge Declares That
Psychic Region Can Be
Studied Effectively.
oung Belmont Latest Victim
Miss Margaret Andrews, beautiful daughter of Paul A.
Andrews and most-reported-to-be-engaged girl in America.
ID FLIGHT HI
Pair of Men Routed When Young
Matron Resents Their Ap
proach With Blows.
! F
Love Preceptor Seeks Divorce
+•+
Lillian Bell’s Advice Fails
Mrs. Lillian Bell Bogue, former Atlanta and first aid to Cu
pid, who seeks divorce.
Company Will Send Big Vessels
Through Canal Every 36 Hours,
It Is Announced.
II. S. BEST
VAST PRESERVE
In the Wichita Park of 70,000
Acres Great Care Is Taken to
Perpetuate Them.